The PPF, the industry-funded, state-backed safety net, demanded that the troubled retailer pump about £9m into the ailing Toys R Us UK pension fund.
This is in order to gain the PPF’s support for the retailer’s planned company voluntary arrangement (CVA) procedure, which involves the closure of at least 26 loss-making stores. That deal would lead to the loss of up to 800 jobs.
The insolvency procedure automatically pushes Toys R Us’s pension fund into assessment by the PPF, giving it a key vote at the meeting and the potential to block the process.
It could be as soon as this weekend that Toys R Us falls into administration, as reportedly the company is not able to put the required £9 million into the pension fund. The also-struggling US Toys R Us is not able to provide any support:The group’s US parent is also unable to lend its UK subsidiary the cash under the terms of its court-led bankruptcy protection. The parent company filed for Chapter 11, the US version of administration, in September after running up $5bn (£3.7bn) of debts.
The PPF is seeking to reassure employees that all pensions accrued by Toys R Us employees are protected.





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